The Differences Between Testing & Debugging

When it comes to software testing, the battle between Tester and Developer is never-ending due to the different approaches to perfect product definition. Testing and Debugging become the “weapons” that are used in that endless battle. But in fact, these terms are usually mistaken to be the same.

In order to provide you a deeper view of the distinctions between them, in this article, we will be talking about the differences between Testing and Debugging and some tips that can help you get eager to debug & debug more effectively.

1. The differences between Testing & Debugging

What is Testing?

Testing: Basically, testing is a process of exploring the system to find defects present in the software, and not only that, this process has to locate the defects and define what will happen once these defects occur. This process is performed in the testing phase by testing team, and after this phase, they will report to the developer team to debug.

What is Debugging?

Debugging: Once Development team received the report from the testing team, they will start debugging. The purpose of this phase is to locate the bug and rids the software of it. It is a one-off process and is done manually. In this process, a special tool called debugger is used in locating the bugs, most of the programming environments have the debugger.

2. 5 Tips to help your debugging process more effective

Prioritize the bug

The first thing you have to take into consideration when debugging is the user experience. In detail, if your software has poor performing, then your user will leave you. Prioritizing the bug helps you know how much the bug affects on your user and determine which bug to fix first. If can use a risk assessment matrix to prioritize the bug.

Reproduce the bug

Make sure that you have reproduced the original bug before making any changes. If you don’t reproduce the bug and proceed to make changes, it will take up a lot of your time if someone re-opens a ticket because the bug hasn’t been removed yet. You won’t remember what you have done before. So, make sure to reproduce the original bug and in case you can’t reproduce it, then ask someone who can.

Do not assume things work the way they are meant to

A certain amount of paranoia is required when bug-fixing. Clearly something doesn’t work as it’s meant to, otherwise you wouldn’t be facing a problem. Be open-minded about where the problem may be – while still bearing in mind what you know of the systems involved. It’s unlikely (but possible) that you’ll find that the cause of the problem is a commonly-used system class – if it looks like System. String is misbehaving, you should test your assumptions carefully against the documentation before claiming to have found a definite bug, but there’s always a possibility of the problem being external.

Know the error code

Knowing the HTTP error code will give you a big advantage in diagnosing bugs, for example:

404 – You might have the wrong url in your app

401 – Your credentials are likely wrong

418 – You’re talking to a teapot!

429 – You’re making too many requests

If you get an HTTP error code, always Google it to make sure you understand it. Again, it’ll save you a lot of time! The same goes for Database drivers and other protocols, search the error with the name of the database and look for the official docs.

If completely “stuck”, ask someone for help!

If you have no idea to solve the problem you are facing and feeling very demoralized, here are some workarounds:

Take a break, approach the bug from a different angle.

Get more aggressive with tracing and logging.

Search engines, Forums,… are the powerful ways that you can find the answer for your problems from peers, communities and even professionals. Give them as much information as possible, they will help you figure it out.

Destroy something (Just for stress relief!)

ConclusionBy the end of the day, both Testing and Debugging exist for the only one reason that is to make the product better and better. No matter which team you are belonging to (Testing team or Debugging team), you are all happy when getting the positive feedback for the improvements of product and it is also the time when the battle is paused.

2 Thoughts to “The Differences Between Testing & Debugging”

[…] you a deeper view of the distinctions between them, in this article, we will be talking about the differences between Testing and Debugging and some tips that can help you get eager to debug & debug more […]

I would say some amount of debugging has to be performed by Test Team before even passing it on to the QA Team. There will be lot of occasions where the issue may be environment specific, data specific and browser specific. It is extremely important that tester thinks through these and provides all the relevant information for the developer to reproduce the issue and provide the fix faster.

Testers job is not only to find the bugs , but at the same time provide as much information as possible to enable the developer and Product management team to provide the fix.